Category Archives: News

New criteria redefine ME

What are you, kidding me? Good news in the land of ME/CFS? Surprisingly: yes.

Every patient has her own nomenclature for her illness, because “chronic fatigue syndrome” has stuck around so long as a garbage diagnosis, and myalgic encephalopathy/encephalomyelitis has never been solidly defined. But now we have both a name and a set of criteria that make solid sense and should greatly aid research efforts.

The International Consensus Criteria was developed by scientists from 13 countries, after exhaustive research. (For a good summary and analysis, see this article by Kimberly McCleary, president and CEO of the CFIDS Association.) Here are some very important points.

1. The illness is defined foremost by the symptom that disables so many of us: post-exertional malaise, now with an even more specific name, post-exertional neuroimmune exhaustion (PENE). This is major. The popular perception of ME has been that it’s all about fatigue, due largely to the term “chronic fatigue syndrome,” which is both vague and misleading. Yes, we are certainly fatigued, but it’s because of PENE.

This is why all that “we can cure fatigue” quackery is so wrong at its very foundation. They intentionally conflate CFS with “fatigue,” which is shooting at the wrong target. I’m actually in the mood now to go pick a fight with one of them, like Teitelbaum, by asking “how does your fatigue product address neurosensory, perceptual and motor disturbances?” (Of course treating fatigue is part of ME, especially for people with milder cases who need help through, say, a work day.)

2. The definition of ME here is specific, yet flexible enough to allow for the range of symptoms that patients experience. The criteria call for a certain number of symptoms in a certain number of categories, all fitting inside the three broad categories of neurology, immunology, and energy production. All current patients can learn whether they meet the criteria for ME, and people who don’t know anything about it can be given a solid diagnosis by their doctor.

This means that one of the biggest problems with ME/CFS research — how the patients are identified as having it — has just been reduced quite a bit. Researchers will be able to use the consensus criteria to replicate each other’s studies, something that has been difficult in the past. People can find out if they’ve been misdiagnosed in some way, since ME symptoms can mirror so many other illnesses, including mental ones.

Now don’t close this page in a fit of red-hot fury or anything; I have the same disgust for Simon Wet Parsley* that so many of us do. But it is certainly true that patients with major depression and even bipolar disorder have been misdiagnosed, in both directions. This is unquestionably good, because those patients can likely get much better treatment for their illness. Additionally, people who have self-diagnosed ME/CFS because they feel tired all the time can now rule it in or out, and get the proper treatment for a different problem or illness, if needed.

3. It’s true that this consensus has only just been published in the Journal of Internal Medicine, and it may certainly end up being debated on both a large and a small scale. But a great deal of the animosity surrounding XMRV rests so squarely on the vagueness of defining criteria, so this is in any case a great step towards removing some of the argument. If you have been reading any ME/CFS discussions lately, that’s a Herculean victory.

I recognize that my excitement about this consensus comes partly from the fact that it’s designed and worded in a way that matches my own educated guesses about ME/CFS. I’m not completely unbiased — and please, if you have a different take on this, do post a comment as I personally have not heard any naysayers yet, and I want to know what problems, if any, exist with this. I remember reading the news of the original XMRV paper, and feeling cautiously optimistic. This, on the other hand, made me joyous. So my predictions are premature, but I don’t think they’re impossible.

Patients who match the criteria now have an excellent rebuttal to any “It’s all in your head” they might receive. It’s also an answer to another chestnut, “You just need to get more sleep.” It’s probably too optimistic to hope that some patients may also quit turning to quacks and snake-oil salespeople, now that the diagnosis/treatment situation has been better clarified, but what the hell, I hope this too.

I’ve called my illness “chronic fatigue syndrome” because of the impression that patients whose symptoms are predominately immune fell into that category, while “ME” was for people with predominately cerebral symptoms. I was partly right about the focus on brain dysfunction, but have learned since that many of my immune-seeming problems are in fact due to just that. (Insert joke here.)

Going through the criteria was surprisingly emotional for me. It’s one thing to fall into a vague category of patients; it’s another to show objectively that I meet the criteria for a much less vague illness. There were symptoms listed that I have in spades but haven’t previously seen described so perfectly, such as “recurrent feelings of feverishness with or without low grade fever,” under the category of “Loss of thermostatic stability.” In a sense it was like having someone validate my symptoms, some of which I’m prone to think are all in my head. By the time I was done reading and rereading the paper and the criteria, I’d decided to identify myself as having ME from now on, while referring to the illness in general as ME/CFS.

Although nothing at all has really changed, it feels a little like a change in identity. A change that I deeply appreciate.

* Real name Simon Wessley, the much-maligned U.K. doctor who insists that the etiology of ME/CFS starts in the mind. He’s close; it does start in the brain, but not the thinking part of it. Apparently his name becomes far more apropos when translated into and then out of another language, and thanks to Linda for pointing this out!

Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon

Weekend sendoff: When am I?

Thanks for sticking around despite my not posting in over a month. I’m not just dropping in to reassure you once again that I have no current plans to stop blogging, either. Newly Nerfed needs a little work, cosmetically as well as under the hood, and I’ll be making those changes as well as perhaps blogging more.

(There may or may not be a very hectic time in my near-ish future, so I don’t want to make any promises. And I’ll tell you about it once I can. No, I am not pregnant in any way.)

As I started to update the blog, I began wondering whether I could really still call myself newly nerfed. My health problems cropped up in 2003, and I finally had to stop working in 2008. And now it’s almost three years of reading, keeping up with research, and writing. Aren’t I now just…nerfed? I’ll be writing about that next week.

This month has flown by in a muddled memory of stress and uncertainty, excitement and good times. Life brought many distractions, including other writing projects and obligations…which are another reason I can’t promise consistent posts here. And that’s not bad at all; it’s just that having to prioritize my energy, I let a lot of it got sucked up into April without too much left for personal blogging. May may be similar.

If you haven’t already read it, I send you off with my guest post for SaveYourself.ca, a Canadian blog about managing pain. It’s about maintaining a romantic relationship when struggling with chronic pain and illness. (It’s not as depressing as it sounds.)

If you have already read it, well then, here’s a clip from The Sarah Jane Adventures. After Lis Sladen‘s death this month, it takes on a new level of meaning. (Which is more depressing than it sounds.) Goodbye, our Sarah Jane.

Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon

Remembering the Triangle fire

Just after the turn of last century, a terrible tragedy took place in New York’s Greenwich Village. A garment factory caught fire, and it was catastrophic. A mixture of mishap and avarice led to the deaths of 146 people, the great majority of whom were immigrant women and children. The youngest was 14 years old.

The 9th floor, where more than half of the workers died

This was the Triangle Fire, which happened 100 years ago today on March 24, 1911. At that time, garment district workers — mostly women — were working to improve conditions and support unionization. While the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union (ILGWU) had been formed only eleven years earlier by male workers, there were now many women involved, for the most part young Jewish and Italian immigrants.

Two years before the fire, there was a small strike at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, and while it had no effect except to get its organizers fired, it was a galvanizing event for Local 25 of the ILGWU. Two months later, Clara Lemlich, a Russian Jewish woman who had arrived in the U.S. eight years earlier, led a three-month general strike in the garment district eventually involving thousands and thousands of workers. While it resulted in higher wages for many of those workers, Triangle’s owners Max Blanck and Isaac Harris kept their shop determinedly non-union.

Max Blanck and Isaac Harris

Conditions at Triangle, like those at other shops, were as demoralizing and exhausting as you can imagine from Dickens’s bleak images of industrial-age factories. The pace was brutal, with no water or bathroom breaks allowed. When mistakes were inevitably made, the workers had to pay for the wasted cloth, thread, and needles. At the end of the day, women were made to open their handbags to prove they hadn’t stolen anything. Blanck and Harris often made it a habit to lock all the other exit doors so nobody could slip out the back.

This was, of course, a large and terrible factor in the number of deaths when the fire started on March 24. While some were able to escape, the floors stuffed with cloth and paper quickly blazed out of control and many were not so lucky. A fire hose on the floor failed. The fire escape turned out to be useless. The workers on the 9th floor were never notified about the fire. When the fire department arrived, it was discovered that their ladders were too short to be of any use in rescuing the trapped workers, many of whom chose to jump to their deaths, tearing through the meager protection of police nets, rather than burn. Witnesses spoke of seeing women at the windows holding hands or hugging before they plunged. (This photo of a policeman staring upwards helplessly while surrounded by the bodies of jumpers is graphic and may be disturbing.)

The Triangle fire, taking place in the middle of the garment district’s contentious efforts to unionize, tragically illustrated some of the very reasons why workers demanded protections. It brought home the struggle to all of New York City; more than 200,000 people from every level of society turned out for the funeral procession that wound around lower Manhattan, honoring the unidentified dead. (Last month, those last six names were finally able to be announced.)

The funeral procession

The Triangle fire led to changes in labor codes and fire standards all over the country and brought awareness of workers’ conditions to the public. One of the witnesses, Frances Perkins, would become the first female Cabinet member, and as Secretary of Labor, her experiences influenced Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. It was a seminal event in the history of the organized labor movement

I’ve been fascinated by what happened at Triangle ever since I lived in New York, half a block away from where the fire took place. The building is still there; I’ve walked past it a hundred times. And it so happens that Blanck and Harris were indicted for manslaughter on my birthday, April 11. (They were acquitted, unfortunately, and settled privately with a score of families whose relatives had died in the fire. Blanck was impressively sleazy; just a couple of years after the fire he was back chaining the doors of his new factory during working hours, and cited for yet more safety violations.)

The Triangle fire helped change the public’s perception of labor unions from pure socialism to something that was necessary to protect workers. The comfort I take away from this ghastly tale is that those 146 people, 123 of them women, didn’t die for nothing. Their deaths have great meaning, especially when only a month ago, thousands of workers protested at Wisconsin’s state capitol for the very protections that the Triangle fire helped bring about.

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire took place during a time of struggle and protest for workers’ rights. 100 years later, that struggle continues on. Let’s remember those who perished, and honor the sacrifice that improved the lives of millions.

Resources:

Triangle, by David Von Drehle
Triangle: Remembering the Fire, HBO documentary
American Experience: Triangle Fire, PBS documentary
The Triangle Factory Fire, Cornell ILR website

(All photos in this post are from from Cornell’s excellent website. My apologies for the links opening in the same window; there is a bug of some kind.)

Post to Twitter Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon